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Family Ministry Moments - April 2024

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 Who is your hero? When I was a kid, I read many comic books.  Superman was my favorite. I went through a season where I probably bought every Superman comic for a year or so.  I looked up to him not because he was an unstoppable force but because he always did the right thing.  He was always trying to protect and help people.  The only problem was he wasn’t real.  Despite the fascination of our culture with superheroes, they don’t exist. As I became a teenager, I started to look to musical artists as heroes.  I grew up right as grunge music became popular and Nirvana sang the anthem of my generation.  I loved Nirvana and thought of Kurt Cobain as a hero; however, as I have matured, I have come to realize that he is no hero at all.

A hero is someone that you can look up to, someone you can attempt to emulate.  Heroes are typically born from suffering and adversity.  In my estimation pop stars, actors, social media stars, and celebrities make terrible heroes; however, these are the people our children are looking to.  These are the people they are trying to emulate.  Please understand that I don’t think all artists and celebrities are bad people.  I just don’t want my children to think of them as heroes.  Think for a moment about their message. First, they are prioritizing entertainment.  This is a major problem in our culture.  People are addicted to entertainment.  We can’t wait to escape from our lives into a screen or concert or some entertainment experience.  Second, the life of a celebrity is driven by fame and fortune.  Is this what we want our children to chase?  Are these the priorities we want them to have?  Celebrities and artists are not heroes.

Who are the heroes we should be pointing our children to?  This year in our school curriculum we looked at the lives of several people I would consider heroes.  Three that stood out to me are Hudson Taylor, Sergeant Alvin York, and Corrie Ten Boom.  These are people who faced immense adversity for the Lord.  They were not perfect people, but they did the right thing.  They trusted God through their trials.  These are people we can truly call heroes.

Hudson Taylor was a British missionary who devoted his life to winning China for the Lord in the mid-1800s.  He faced many trials such as illness, the death of his first wife, the death of three of his eight children, being deserted by co-laborers, persecution, and financial strain; however, through it all, he persisted.  He preached the gospel and planted churches. Today many of the millions of Chinese Christians can trace their spiritual lineage directly back to the influence of Taylor.

Sergeant Alvin York was a country boy from the hills of Tennessee.  He was a drunkard and troublemaker in his youth.  He was saved and turned away from a sinful lifestyle to serve the Lord.  In 1917 he was drafted into the Army to serve in the Great War; because of his religious beliefs, he objected to killing and tried to get a religious exemption.  His exemption was denied, and he was forced to go.  He proved himself to be an expert marksman in basic training where he still wrestled with the fact that he would have to kill his fellow man.  After much prayer and counsel from his superior officer, he decided that to make peace, sometimes men must fight.  He went on to fight bravely in World War I and earned a Medal of Honor for his part in the Meuse–Argonne offensive.  He was instrumental in taking out a machine gun nest that had the Allied soldiers pinned down.  He single-handedly killed 25 enemy soldiers and captured 132.

Corrie Ten Boom was a Christian living in the Netherlands during World War II.  Her city suffered German occupation and while her family was not bothered at first by the Germans, they knew many of their Jewish neighbors were suffering. Defiantly, her family hid many Jews in their home and participated in the Dutch Underground Resistance to help Jews escape Nazi persecution.  Corrie, along with her sister and father, was arrested and sent to a concentration camp.  She alone survived the experience.  Her faith was the reason she helped the Jews, and her faith was what sustained her in the harsh conditions of the camps.

These are just a couple of examples of real heroes.  We can point to many others throughout history that bear the same title.  We find many heroes in the Bible, like King David or the Apostle Paul, and of course the greatest hero of them all, our Lord, Jesus! We can go on and on and name so many more.  These are the type of men and women we can point our children to, the type they should look up to.  Let’s redefine what a hero means and point our children to true heroes!

Posted by Bryan Gotcher with

Student Life - April 2024

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This school semester, pastor Bryan and I desired to teach the students apologetics for the Christian faith and to equip them with a foundation of practical understanding of Christianity. We sought after asking the students: “why do you believe what you believe?” This could look like: why do you believe in creation, or evolution, or Jesus, or God, or even the Bible? We wanted to challenge them to shape their own thoughts and ideas about what they believed, while following closely with facts, truth, and most importantly, biblical truth. I’m pleased to report that during the many weeks of Bryan and I preaching these messages to the students, we could really see some gears turning in some heads.

So, as I said, we covered a lot of ground to help the students form their own foundations for the Christian faith based off of this apologetics series we’ve been going through. Bryan and I have been using a book called The 10 Most Common Objections To Christianity by Alex McFarland. One of our early chapters we preached on was understanding if the Bible is an authentic book or source to study and/or believe. And this is a good question. If you are a Christian, you have to ask yourself: “Do I believe that the Bible is true? That we can believe what is said in it?” Or, if some don’t believe the Bible is true, why would they think that? Would they think because the Bible has been translated so many times, surely there have been errors in the translations? Or the Bible has been written by men, and powerful men got their hands on it to change the message of the Bible or its stories; surely we cannot believe the bible to be authentic and accurate to its original texts. What we were able to teach the students was not only has the Bible been handled and cared for very well, but we have COUNTLESS proof that there are no changes/errors in it. If we were to question any Old Testament writings, we can run to the Dead Sea Scrolls as proof for accurate and faithful translations of the texts and faithful reproductions of the message of the texts. It was amazing to test the students and see how they felt about the very old and dusty Old Testament books, to then build up their confidence in the texts because we can prove the historicity of the texts, the faithful translation of the texts, and the faithful transmission of the texts message. What a joy it was to walk through this sermon with them.

Amongst other chapters and sermons this semester, we also talked about Jesus. That’s probably a good thing and sounds like such a Sunday School thing to say. But, it’s important to ask people who they think Jesus was or is! So we asked the students this! And one of the chapters in our book was a common objection to Christianity is the belief that Jesus was just a man. So, we asked the question: if Jesus was just a man, what does that mean for us? Because, you have to think about it. To prove that Jesus was just a man, find His body. Go to the tomb, see that He is still there. Thus would prove this Man was just human and led a strange ministry. However, the problem is, that tomb was empty!! Praise God! Jesus made a bunch of claims about Himself and about God during His earthly ministry, but it all wouldn’t have mattered if He died and stayed dead. But, since He did rise from the dead, that means we have some serious thinking to do. And it was awesome to walk the students through this thinking! Because it’s so easy to prove that there was a historical man named Jesus around 2,000 years ago and was also crucified, we had to ask them the hard questions! If Jesus really is God and rose from the dead, then what does that mean for them? Does that mean He is an expert con man, or is He the Messiah that was prophesied? What a gift it was to teach them this truth as well.

So, our students have been asking the hard questions these past couple Sunday nights. We want them to form their own opinions and truths about the Bible, Christ, and Christianity. We want them to work through these hard questions as well, not just accepting what others have told them. And I truly believe the Lord has been working in them this semester. Like I said, I’ve seen the gears turning, and what a joy it was to witness. So there’s a little glimpse of what has been going on in our student ministry. It’s been awesome so far, and we are looking forward to the few remaining weeks we have left!

To God be the Glory!

Posted by Alex Kilgore with

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